Authors
Eoin J O'Gorman, Ólafur P Ólafsson, Benoît OL Demars, Nikolai Friberg, Guðni Guðbergsson, Elísabet R Hannesdóttir, Michelle C Jackson, Liselotte S Johansson, Órla B McLaughlin, Jón S Ólafsson, Guy Woodward, Gísli M Gíslason
Publication date
2016/9
Journal
Global Change Biology
Volume
22
Issue
9
Pages
3206-3220
Description
Global warming is widely predicted to reduce the biomass production of top predators, or even result in species loss. Several exceptions to this expectation have been identified, however, and it is vital that we understand the underlying mechanisms if we are to improve our ability to predict future trends. Here, we used a natural warming experiment in Iceland and quantitative theoretical predictions to investigate the success of brown trout as top predators across a stream temperature gradient (4–25 °C). Brown trout are at the northern limit of their geographic distribution in this system, with ambient stream temperatures below their optimum for maximal growth, and above it in the warmest streams. A five‐month mark‐recapture study revealed that population abundance, biomass, growth rate, and production of trout all increased with stream temperature. We identified two mechanisms that contributed to these responses …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
EJ O'Gorman, ÓP Ólafsson, BOL Demars, N Friberg… - Global change biology, 2016